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Subject: Character Assassination, 9-11 Style
Date: Sat, 11 May 2002 19:52:55 +0100
From: Tony Gosling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Character Assassination of Rep. Cynthia McKinney
Anatomy Of A US Military Smear Campaign

Kill the Messenger
<http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/050702_killthe.html>

Public Reaction to Rep. McKinney’s Call for 9-11 Investigation Quashes Intended Media 
Massacre

by Michael Davidson, FTW Staff Writer

May 6, 2002, 12:00 PM PDT (FTW)

-- It's not a good idea to go up against the powers that be with an idea that calls 
into question generally accepted wisdom. Galileo contradicted the Roman Catholic 
Church when he said the Earth revolved around the sun. He was put in jail, and it took 
a few hundred years for the church to exonerate him and admit he was correct.

Hopefully, a fate similar to Galileo's will not befall Cynthia McKinney.

McKinney is the representative from the 4th district of Georgia. The district includes 
Decatur, just outside Atlanta.

McKinney is a Democrat, black, and, obviously, a woman. Three strikes in an area that 
has sent the likes of Newt Gingrich and Bob Barr to Congress.

On March 25 McKinney was interviewed by telephone on Flashpoints, an independent radio 
program produced and hosted by Dennis Bernstein and broadcast on Pacifica station KPFA 
in Berkeley, Calif. The congresswoman read a roughly 10-minute statement, then 
answered questions and chatted with Bernstein for another 16 or so minutes. A major 
portion of McKinney's statement concerned U.S. actions in Africa, and contained 
stinging attacks of the Clinton administration, particularly former Secretary of State 
Madeleine Albright. She also discussed the high incarceration rate of blacks, their 
treatment by the police, and the actual mechanics of the massive voter fraud in 
Florida that benefited George W. Bush during the 2000 presidential election. Rep. 
McKinney also pointed out how the current administration has created a climate in 
which elected officials need to censor themselves lest their patriotism be questioned. 
Only a few sentences in the almost 30-minute segment were her comments!
  about the need for an investigation into what the Bush Administration knew prior to 
the events of 9-11. Two-and-a-half weeks later on April 12, an article appeared in the 
Washington Post about McKinney's appearance on Flashpoints. The article was written by 
Juliet Eilperin, a Post staff writer who says a colleague received the show's 
transcript in an anonymous e-mail, and passed it along to her. Eilperin's article was 
headlined, "Democrat Implies Sept. 11 Administration Plot."

What McKinney actually said was the American people deserve a full, complete and 
no-holds-barred investigation of the events involving 9-11, and what the Bush 
administration knew and when they knew it.  Every single question McKinney raised was 
based on information readily available from mainstream media sources. Among the issues 
McKinney raised regarding 9-11
were: - The warnings from several foreign governments to the highest levels of the 
U.S. government that were ignored; - The huge profits made in sophisticated stock 
transactions involving several airlines, brokerages and insurance firms whose stock 
prices were affected dramatically by 9-11; - The relationship between the oil company 
Unocal and the Taliban rulers of Afghanistan; - The relationship between the 
administration and the Carlyle Group, an investment firm with major defense holdings 
for whom the president's father works; - The requests by both the president and vice 
president that any congressional investigations into 9-11 not be particularly intense 
or lengthy; - The huge profits persons close to the administration will make thanks to 
increased defense spending.

Let the games begin

Almost immediately after the Washington Post article, the administration, the 
mainstream media and its pundits shifted into overdrive, floored the pedal, and wound 
the smear engine right to the redline. Interestingly, no one has challenged the 
accuracy of a single word McKinney said. What has been said, in a variety of ways, is 
that her call for a complete investigation is an indication that McKinney is either 
"crazy" or "treacherous."

In the original Washington Post article, Bush spokesman Scott McLellan was quoted as 
saying “The American people know the facts, and they dismiss such ludicrous, baseless 
views." Carlyle Group spokesman Chris Ullman posed the question "Did she say these 
things while standing on a grassy knoll in Roswell, New Mexico?"

That same day, April 12, "Representative Awful” was posted on National Review Online 
by Jonah Goldberg, son of Lucianne Goldberg -- literary agent, Linda Tripp crony, and 
former Nixon dirty trickster. National Review was founded by William F. Buckley, whose 
family fortune was made in the oil business. Goldberg dismissed McKinney's suggestion 
for an investigation, saying "I am not aware of any evidence that Ms. McKinney has 
murdered several children or that she personally profited from sleeping with the 
entire defensive squad of the Atlanta Falcons." He then goes on to say that the 
congresswoman is suffering "paranoid, America-hating, crypto-Marxist conspiratorial 
delusions."

Anyone who remembers the Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings will remember Anita 
Hill was described as "a little bit nutty, a little bit slutty." Apparently, Goldberg 
has learned some big words to repeat the easy smear used against any black woman to 
the left of Condoleezza Rice. Keep in mind that in an Oct. 29 attack piece on McKinney 
Goldberg wrote, "Taking black politicians seriously pays them a compliment." Next, 
McKinney's hometown newspaper took up the charge. An April 13 Atlanta 
Journal-Constitution (AJC) article by staff writer Melanie Eversley reported that 
Democratic Georgia Sen. Zell Miller issued a "bristling" statement saying her on-air 
comments were "dangerous and irresponsible."

Not being content to dismiss the legitimate, American ideas of dissent and question, 
Miller made a sarcastic comment about McKinney attempting to get kissed by President 
Bush. Bush's press secretary, Ari Fleischer, is quoted: "All I can tell you is the 
congresswoman must be running for the hall of fame of the Grassy Knoll Society." 
Interesting that the "grassy knoll" allusion was made twice by people connected to the 
administration, yet they will not dispute her facts. The AJC article also quotes Emory 
University political scientist Merle Black: "It reinforces the view among serious 
people in her district that she's a very ineffective representative if this is how she 
chooses to spend her political capital." Apparently there are very few "serious" 
people Black will be able to "reinforce" with his totally "unscientific" opinion, as 
McKinney has won five elections in a row, with her lowest margin of victory being 58 
percent.

Along with Eversley's article, AJC put up a poll on its website asking the question, 
"Are you satisfied the Bush administration had no advance warning of the Sept. 11 
attacks?" A visitor could vote "Yes," "No, I think officials knew it was coming" or 
"I'm not sure. Congress should investigate."

Big mistake

Within hours, the "No, I think officials knew it was coming" vote led the "Yes" vote 
51 percent to 47 percent, with two percent "Not sure." The ultra-conservative website 
FreeRepublic.com alerted its viewers and encouraged them to vote against McKinney, to 
no avail. The vote seesawed back and forth across the 50 percent mark, each side 
holding a slim lead at various points throughout the day. By mid-afternoon 23,145 
people had voted. "Yes" (anti-McKinney) had 52 percent, "No" (pro-McKinney) had 46 
percent, and "Not sure" had one percent. Forty-seven percent of voters do not believe 
the story the world has been told by the Bush Administration. Then, the poll vanished. 
Gone. Disappeared. Not there.

People signed on to vote, but there was no poll to vote at. The article was there, but 
the poll was gone. There was no explanation. On April 21, AJC columnist Mike King 
explained what happened.

"The responses broke down the tabulator we use to keep track of the votes." So can we 
assume, then, when Mr. King gets a flat tire he throws the entire car away and 
abandons his trip?

King goes on at great length to inform the reader that even if the poll had not been 
taken down due to "mechanical problems," the poll was meaningless anyway because 
"groups and people who believe there is evidence of a conspiracy in the attacks urged 
friends to vote on ajc.com to send Congress a message of the need to investigate."

This undoubtedly occurred, as did urging from the other side which King makes no 
mention of. He also says that voters were not "scientifically" chosen to represent a 
broad cross-section of views and that "most online polls are really just opportunities 
to register an opinion." How registering an opinion differs from a vote will be left 
for Noah Webster to explain. Another online poll has been running regarding McKinney's 
call for a thorough investigation. This one is at truthout.com, an online digest of 
articles being published in the mainstream media. While truthout readers are 
undoubtedly more open to McKinney's ideas than the general public, at press time, the 
poll shows 5,616 supporting the congresswoman versus 80 opposing her. Truthout also 
reports McKinney's call for a 9-11 investigation is supported by two additional 
members of the House -- Democrats Loretta Sanchez of California and Major Owens of New 
York.

Interestingly, while truthout is a non-profit organization entirely dependent on 
donations, it has had no problems keeping its poll functioning, while the Atlanta 
Journal-Constitution, a major for-profit entity, claims they could not.

WHERE ARE THE CLOWNS?

With the AJC poll having turned into a debacle, the forces arrayed against McKinney 
became desperate, and the smear became vicious. On April 16, the Southeastern Legal 
Foundation (SLF) released a report claiming 21 percent of McKinney's 1999-2000 
campaign contributions of over $101 came from Arab or Middle-Eastern-connected 
individuals and organizations. The report states among the organizations donating to 
McKinney's campaign are "the American-Muslim Council and the Council on 
American/Islamic Relations, both of which maintain ties or have expressed support for 
terrorist organizations."

Phil Kent, SLF president, is quoted in the report: "If we are to give any credence to 
her baseless claims, the American people deserve to know that McKinney's financial 
'relationships' -- her campaign contributors -- are heavily represented by Arab and 
Middle Eastern-connected individuals, as well as organizations which have expressed 
sympathy for terrorist organizations." Here we have examples of how McKinney's call 
for an investigation morphs into "claims," and how an investigation into her is 
acceptable, while one into the Bush Administration is not. The SLF report flew around 
the Internet, and was posted on several conservative websites. It was generally 
headlined to the effect, "McKinney Supported by Terrorists."

SLF was founded in 1976 and has received major financial support from Richard Mellon 
Scaife, the billionaire reactionary who funded the 10-year effort to destroy President 
Bill Clinton. In 2000 the Democratic National Committee accused the SLF of sending a 
quarter-million deceptive pieces of mail designed to interfere with that year's census 
and result in inaccurate congressional representation. In issue after issue during its 
26 years, SLF has consistently taken vehement anti-black, anti-environment, 
anti-worker, anti-gay, and anti-public education positions. They are currently 
preparing litigation to invalidate portions of the Bush-signed 
McCain-Feingold/Shays-Meehan campaign reform legislation. Some in the Atlanta area 
believe SLF's long-range goal is overturning the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

SLF describes itself as "an Atlanta-based public interest law firm which advocates 
limited government, individual economic freedom, and the free enterprise system in the 
courts of law and public opinion.” SLF's website includes links to other reactionary 
groups including the Heritage Foundation, the Hudson Institute, Federalist Society, 
and the Conservative Caucus Foundation. Along with links to expected conservative 
media outlets such as WorldNetDaily, Drudge, and the Conservative News Service, SLF 
links itself to Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, C-SPAN, and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 
Matthew Glavin was SLF president and chief executive from 1994 to 2000, and devoted a 
tremendous amount of energy, and Scaife's money, trying to get Bill Clinton disbarred 
in Arkansas for his alleged perjury in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case. Glavin, 
however, was forced to abandon these efforts, and resign after he was arrested for 
fondling himself in public. According to an Oct. 4, 2000 r!
 eport on CNSNEWS.com, an affiliate of the above-mentioned Conservative News Service, 
an undercover federal officer found Glavin masturbating near a parking lot in the 
Chattahoochee National River Park in Atlanta, an area said to be popular with 
homosexual cruisers. The arresting officer says that he, himself, was fondled lewdly 
when he spoke to Glavin on Oct. 13, 2000. The AJC reported Glavin had pled guilty and 
was sentenced to a year's probation.

On April 22 SLF sent a letter to House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt demanding 
McKinney be removed from her seats on both the House Armed Services and International 
Relations committees, citing the above-mentioned campaign donations from Middle 
Eastern contributors. That same day, an identical request using virtually identical 
language was made by the African-American Republican Leadership Council (AARLC). Like 
SLF, AARLC also requested an ethics investigation of McKinney. Additionally, AARLC has 
also asked the chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus, Rep. Eddie Bernie 
Johnson, D-Texas, to suspend McKinney from that group. This is a transparent ploy to 
intimidate and divide black members of Congress, lest their patriotism be questioned.

Also on April 22, an article was posted on the website of Human Events, the National 
Conservative Weekly. Written by David Freddoso, it's headlined "Feds Searched Offices 
of Seven McKinney Donors." Many Arab names are listed as well as several 
organizations, some of which have names with Arab or Islamic references. Going into 
excruciating detail, Freddoso lists names of individuals, organizations, dollar 
amounts, dates of search warrants, judges signing search warrants (interestingly, 
copies of search warrants were allegedly obtained by Human Events), and the 
connections between all these details. Then, Freddoso writes, "None of the McKinney 
contributors has been charged with any crime, a Customs spokesman said." Apparently, 
Freddoso finds not being charged with a crime to be news.

HYSTERICAL BLINDNESS

Britain’s The Guardian reported March 25 on a recent FBI raid. The Republican Party 
was accepting sizeable donations to a political action committee called The Islamic 
Institute from an alleged terrorist support group, the Safa Trust. It seems that the 
Safa Trust had been sending money to both the Republican Party and to terrorist groups 
at the same time. This reported direct linkage between terrorist funding and the 
Republican Party was conveniently ignored, while McKinney was attacked with much 
weaker allegations. These backfired too.

SLF's report, AARLC's letter, and Freddoso's article all specifically discuss 
donations to McKinney from Abdurahman Alamoudi, founder and executive director of the 
American Muslim Council (AMC). According to an April 24 article at onlinejournal.com, 
AMC supported George W. Bush in the 2000 campaign and donated money to him. Bush also 
invited Alamoudi to the Sept. 14 prayer service for the 9-11 victims at the National 
Cathedral. Additionally, long-time Bush associate Grover Norquist has been doing 
business with Alamoudi, and is a registered lobbyist for the Islamic Institute. 
According to the Oct. 4 issue of the Boston Phoenix, Norquist's firm, Janus-Merritt 
Strategies LLC, has been paid over $20,000 by Alamoudi.

Despite Alamoudi's Republican connections, his donation to McKinney is used as the 
"smoking gun" in the April 22 column by nationally syndicated columnist Kathleen 
Parker. Parker has been one of the most prolific members of the "get McKinney" team, 
jumping into the smear campaign with all four paws. Parker wrote about McKinney's 
radio comments on April 17 and 22. She's very upset. In the April 17 column, Parker 
dreams of inaugurating "The McKinney Award -- for people too stupid to serve in public 
office." Further on, Parker, like everyone participating in the smear campaign, claims 
that McKinney said Bush knew of the impending 9-11 attacks, and accused the president 
of mass murder. She also picks up Jonah Goldberg's pathetic attempt at sarcasm, 
writing "A complete investigation also might prove that McKinney has been dropping 
acid and living with cross-dressing dental hygienists under the Brooklyn Bridge." What 
is it about outspoken black women that makes right-wing nut jobs!
  attribute unusual sexual behavior to them?

In her April 22 column, Parker reiterates her lie as to what McKinney actually said. 
She goes on: "She's black, which means people give her a pass lest they be perceived 
racist." Parker quotes an unnamed "e-mailer" who quotes a friend in Ramallah: "If you 
see 'Cynth,' kindly tell her that Arab TV networks appreciate her comments for they 
now have the needed 'proof' that their paranoia is rational." Parker closes: "None of 
which is to suggest that Cynthia McKinney is a terrorist, or a terrorist sympathizer, 
or even a socialist rabble-rouser who despises her own country. On the other hand, 
using McKinney's own talent for inferential dot-connecting, she just might be."

Despite finding nice ways to call McKinney a terrorist and traitor, Parker strenuously 
defends her independence and complete lack of bias. In her April 24 column, which is 
about so-called "conspiracy theories," Parker wrote, "I'm told, for instance, that I'm 
paid by the right-wing propaganda machine, given my support of most Bush policies in 
the wake of 9-11 and my rejection of current conspiracy theories.’You're being paid to 
lie to the American people,' wrote one of my new friends. Here's the truth: I know of 
no reporter, editor or columnist in the Western hemisphere who wouldn't sell his 
mother's honeymoon pictures for a good story, no matter whose life gets ruined.

No one, especially a president, is off limits when truth is at stake, not to mention 
Pulitzers." Perhaps Parker found a new dedication to Truth after writing two 
consecutive columns filled with lies, innuendo and character assassination. The story 
about McKinney's comments on the Flashpoints radio show traveled around the media for 
about 12 days, then just petered out. Several newspapers ran editorials condemning 
her, including the AJC and the New York Post. Comments and asides were made about her 
on CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News. Generally, she was described as crazy, pro-Iraqi, a 
conspiracy theorist, irresponsible or dangerous, but it didn't seem to work. The 
public wasn't responding with the sense of outrage the media is used to being able to 
create.

On April 17 ABCNews.com ran a piece by Dean Schabner headed, "What Consensus? 
Conspiracy Theorist Immune to the Widespread Support For War on Terror." First line: 
"When the government said evidence pointed to Islamic fundamentalist terrorists, other 
voices wondered why investigators weren't looking in other directions." The article, 
about three pages, lays out many of the beliefs that, apparently, a lot of people 
have, and discusses them in a calm, measured manner. While Schabner does eventually 
get around to dismissing everything but the official story as "conspiracy theories," 
his words and the words of the "experts" he quotes don't have the wild-eyed hatred and 
anger that the stories about McKinney generally do. Schabner comes close to giving the 
"non-believers" a degree of respect.

TRUE GRIT

The acceptability of alternate explanations for 9-11 may be growing for a very simple 
reason. According to a poll taken in late-April by Scott Rasmussen Public Opinion 
Research, 36 percent of Americans believe Al Gore won the 2000 presidential election. 
Over a third of America's citizens believe the man occupying the White House to be a 
fraud! With such a large portion of the country believing George W. Bush is not really 
the president, it's not hard to understand why almost half of the voters in the AJC 
poll indicated they do not believe the Bush Administration's story about 9-11, and 
support McKinney's call for a full investigation. Whenever Bush allies try to impose 
new police-state tactics on Americans, such as warrantless searches, random drug 
tests, racial profiling, or stop-and-frisk laws, they always say, "If you have nothing 
to hide, you have nothing to worry about. It's just a minor inconvenience for the 
public good."

If the Bush Administration keeps repeating that mantra, then they should have no 
trouble supporting McKinney’s call for a full and complete investigation into 9-11. 
<http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/050702_killthe.html>

THE STORY OF THE CENTURY AND THE EFFORT TO DERAIL IT - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
THE McKINNEY CONSPIRACY THEORY <http://etherzone.com/2002/raim051702.shtml>

Intended Rep. McKinney’s Call for 9-11 Investigation 
<http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=26029>
=============================================================================

911- What Did They Know and When Did They Know It? 
<http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=26009>

Instant Messages To Israel Warned Of WTC Attack - Brian McWilliams 
<http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=26010>

Proclamation of Liberty <http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=25952>

POWERFUL SPEECH BY REP. RON PAUL 
<http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=24626>

5th Annual Sovereignty & Your Rights Seminar - Jay Walley 
<http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=25962>

THE POSSE COMITATUS ACT: A PRINCIPLE IN NEED OF RENEWAL 
<http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=25994>

My implant is guarnteed for life! - APFN 
<http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=25804>

In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. Find elected 
officials, including the president, members of
Congress, governors, state legislators, local officials, and more. 
<http://disc.server.com/Indices/149495.html>

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